EAST SUSSEX.- This spectacular exhibition comprises drawings, prints and experimental films, and explores the recurring tension between figuration and abstraction throughout the 20th century and the ways by which ideas and concepts evolve. Presented non-chronologically, it encompasses movements such as Russian Constructivism, Futurism and Vorticism, Abstract Expressionism and Minimalism, and comprises works by key artists, as well as works of artists who have been sidelined in the mainstream of art history.

Film-maker, painter and curator Lutz Becker traces a personal path through the art of the 20th century and sees two major strands of drawing emerging  the geometric and the gestural.

He writes: It is the awareness of time as the measure of the distance between thought and realisation, of the value of the transient and sense of the fragility of the inspirational moment, that made me decide to show predominantly works on paper: drawing, no longer about the recording of appearances, but as a language reflecting its own becoming, often daring and experimental. The inclusion of film will extend the idea that mental and physical motion are key experiences common to artists and audience.

Lutz Becker is currently Curatorial Fellow at Kettles Yard. He was born in 1941, brought up in East and West Berlin , and studied at the Slade, becoming a distinguished director of political and art documentaries such as Art in Revolution 1971, Double Headed Eagle 1972, Lion of Judah 1981 and Vita Futurista 1987. A practicing painter, he is also an experienced curator of exhibitions. He collaborated with the Hayward Gallery on The Romantic Spirit in German Art 1994, Art and Power 1995 and Tate Modern on  Century City  2001. He curated the South Bank Centre touring exhibition Avant-Garde Graphics and the recent exhibition at the Estorick Foundation, Cut and Paste  European photomontage 1920-45. Becker is currently reconstructing Sergei Eisenstein's film Que viva Mexico , and an updated version of Vita Futurista accompanied the recent Futurist exhibition at Tate Modern.